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Hope you are well - sorry to hear that you haven't reached your target yet. What is your goal? Have you used the GMAT Paper Tests and Question Pack 1? What have been your scores on the GMAT Prep and Exam Pack 1?

Happy Studies,

A. _________________

"It is a curious property of research activity that after the problem has been solved the solution seems obvious. This is true not only for those who have not previously been acquainted with the problem, but also for those who have worked over it for years." -Dr. Edwin Land

I used the MGMAT exams and GMAT exam 1,2,3,4. However as I have used the MGMAT many times, this time I only used GMAT prep for my latest mocks and scored 570, 600, 570, 600. my last GMAT take was 560 with Q 47 , V 21. I need around 650, and the school will accept anything above 600.

So I know I was weak in Verbal but in my mocks I get 600 twice and I was comfortable that I can hit the 30 marks in Verbal.

Now I am considering the GMAT question bank and additional paper exams pack.

No I have to retake the exam in July and it will be my last chance as I have a conditional offer for September this year.

Thanks

HerrGrau wrote:

Hi Saifa,

Hope you are well - sorry to hear that you haven't reached your target yet. What is your goal? Have you used the GMAT Paper Tests and Question Pack 1? What have been your scores on the GMAT Prep and Exam Pack 1?

Thanks for the additional information. A few things that you might consider:

1. To improve GMAT verbal you are probably going to have to improve your reading. One way to do that is to read a challenging article every day. The Economist is a great option. It is critical to practice being an active reader. To process the information as you are reading. Here is an article on using the economist to improve GMAT reading comprehension. You might also consider picking a few novels to read over the next couple of months in addition to the economist.

2. Find a method for each type of verbal question type and practice that method over and over again until it becomes second nature.

3. Be spending more time reviewing your wrong answers than doing new question sets. Spend as much time as you need to understand why a correct answer is correct. This is critical.

4. Your Quant may be at the level where you can start using GMAT Club Quant CATs. These are very challenging but excellent practice for those who want to get their GMAT Quant to the next level. Don't worry about your scores on these. Focus on the learning. This practice will be frustrating at first but have patience:)

If you retake in July you have about 2 months to do this. I think you can get this done. It's going to be important to get organized so make a GMAT schedule and make sure to leave time to relax. You've been doing this for a while so try not to put too much pressure on yourself. It will take a little bit of time to develop the proper confidence in your GMAT verbal. Again, take your time working through the material. The important thing is that you really understand the logic of each question.

PS: One more thing that has helped other ESL students - for the first half of your preparation do all of your work with the help of a dictionary _________________

"It is a curious property of research activity that after the problem has been solved the solution seems obvious. This is true not only for those who have not previously been acquainted with the problem, but also for those who have worked over it for years." -Dr. Edwin Land

1 - Do you think I should use the GMAT prep tests ( Free and Pack 1) since I have undertake them many times?2- Should I also be using the MGMAT tests as I undertook them more than 6 times?3- Should I undertake full exam during my preparation or I better focus more on the Verbal section at this stage?4- Do you think taking any online courses will benefit me at this stage?

I did develop a strategy for answering each question type but I admit that I may have not completely stick to it during the exam, specially the RC and CR sections.

I hope I can get better understanding this time for each section of the Verbal with the help of the recommended materials.

Again, many thanks for your inputs.

Saifa

HerrGrau wrote:

Hi Saifa,

Thanks for the additional information. A few things that you might consider:

1. To improve GMAT verbal you are probably going to have to improve your reading. One way to do that is to read a challenging article every day. The Economist is a great option. It is critical to practice being an active reader. To process the information as you are reading. Here is an article on using the economist to improve GMAT reading comprehension. You might also consider picking a few novels to read over the next couple of months in addition to the economist.

2. Find a method for each type of verbal question type and practice that method over and over again until it becomes second nature.

3. Be spending more time reviewing your wrong answers than doing new question sets. Spend as much time as you need to understand why a correct answer is correct. This is critical.

4. Your Quant may be at the level where you can start using GMAT Club Quant CATs. These are very challenging but excellent practice for those who want to get their GMAT Quant to the next level. Don't worry about your scores on these. Focus on the learning. This practice will be frustrating at first but have patience:)

If you retake in July you have about 2 months to do this. I think you can get this done. It's going to be important to get organized so make a GMAT schedule and make sure to leave time to relax. You've been doing this for a while so try not to put too much pressure on yourself. It will take a little bit of time to develop the proper confidence in your GMAT verbal. Again, take your time working through the material. The important thing is that you really understand the logic of each question.

Lots of very good questions - I should have time to respond tonight after teaching. Have a great day!

Happy Studies,

A.

PS: It might be helpful for other people to Add Kudos to each of these posts because there is a lot of information here that could be helpful other people on GMAT Club in a similar situation. _________________

"It is a curious property of research activity that after the problem has been solved the solution seems obvious. This is true not only for those who have not previously been acquainted with the problem, but also for those who have worked over it for years." -Dr. Edwin Land

1 - Do you think I should use the GMAT prep tests ( Free and Pack 1) since I have undertake them many times?Unless you are 100% certain of every question on these tests, there is still more that you can learn. You can let the Exam Pack rest for a month and then take it again once you have become less familiar with it. For the free tests you can work through the entire question bank. There is a post on GMAT Club with the GMAT Prep Question Bank Attached. The verbal question bank is very useful.

2- Should I also be using the MGMAT tests as I undertook them more than 6 times? You can let these rest a bit and start with GMAT Club. Once you get back to MGMAT you will have become less familiar with the questions. I would just take the Quant sections. In general I would stick with working on official GMAT verbal questions.

3- Should I undertake full exam during my preparation or I better focus more on the Verbal section at this stage?I think it would help you to take a solid month to focus on the pieces and then go back to working on full exams.

4- Do you think taking any online courses will benefit me at this stage?This is very tough for me to judge. I wish I had more insight on this for you.

Happy Studies,

A. _________________

"It is a curious property of research activity that after the problem has been solved the solution seems obvious. This is true not only for those who have not previously been acquainted with the problem, but also for those who have worked over it for years." -Dr. Edwin Land

Thanks for your advice, I shall plan my study accordingly and I am hopeful to get the required score this time.

Many thanks again.

Saifa

HerrGrau wrote:

1 - Do you think I should use the GMAT prep tests ( Free and Pack 1) since I have undertake them many times?Unless you are 100% certain of every question on these tests, there is still more that you can learn. You can let the Exam Pack rest for a month and then take it again once you have become less familiar with it. For the free tests you can work through the entire question bank. There is a post on GMAT Club with the GMAT Prep Question Bank Attached. The verbal question bank is very useful.

2- Should I also be using the MGMAT tests as I undertook them more than 6 times? You can let these rest a bit and start with GMAT Club. Once you get back to MGMAT you will have become less familiar with the questions. I would just take the Quant sections. In general I would stick with working on official GMAT verbal questions.

3- Should I undertake full exam during my preparation or I better focus more on the Verbal section at this stage?I think it would help you to take a solid month to focus on the pieces and then go back to working on full exams.

4- Do you think taking any online courses will benefit me at this stage?This is very tough for me to judge. I wish I had more insight on this for you.

Have you tried working with a private tutor? It seems like you need someone to help you focus your studying, since you've already taken the test several times. I was in a somewhat similar situation, but with quant instead of verbal. I scored well on quant on my mock tests, but then didn't do as well on the official test. After taking the test twice, I worked with a private tutor and my quant score significantly improved on my third and final attempt. _________________